
Text -- Hosea 12:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Hos 12:7
Wesley: Hos 12:7 - -- Ephraim is so far from being as Jacob, that you may account him a Canaanite, a subtle merchant.
Ephraim is so far from being as Jacob, that you may account him a Canaanite, a subtle merchant.
JFB: Hos 12:7 - -- A play on the double sense of the Hebrew, "Canaan," that is, a Canaanite and a "merchant" Eze 16:3 : "Thy birth is . . . of Canaan." They who naturall...
A play on the double sense of the Hebrew, "Canaan," that is, a Canaanite and a "merchant" Eze 16:3 : "Thy birth is . . . of Canaan." They who naturally were descendants of pious Jacob had become virtually Canaanites, who were proverbial as cheating merchants (compare Isa 23:11, Margin), the greatest reproach to Israel, who despised Canaan. The Phœnicians called themselves Canaanites or merchants (Isa 23:8).

Open violence: as the "balances of deceit" imply fraud.
Clarke -> Hos 12:7
Clarke: Hos 12:7 - -- He is a merchant - Or a Canaanite; referring to the Phoenicians, famous for their traffic. Ephraim is as corrupt as those heathenish traffickers wer...
He is a merchant - Or a Canaanite; referring to the Phoenicians, famous for their traffic. Ephraim is as corrupt as those heathenish traffickers were. He kept, as many in all ages have done, a weight and a weight; a heavy one to buy with and a light one to sell by.
Calvin -> Hos 12:7
Calvin: Hos 12:7 - -- But while the Prophet exhorted the Israelites to repentance, he adds, that such was their perverseness, that it was done without any fruit. Canaan! ...
But while the Prophet exhorted the Israelites to repentance, he adds, that such was their perverseness, that it was done without any fruit. Canaan! he says; I read this by itself; for what some consider to be understood is frigid, as, “He was assimilated to, or was like Canaan, in whose hand,” etc. . But, on the contrary, the Prophet here condemns the Israelites by one word; as though he said, that they were wholly aliens, and unworthy to be called the children of Abraham. And thus what we say is often abrupt, when we speak indignantly. The Prophet then calls them “Canaan” through indignation; which means this, “Ye are not the children of Abraham; ye falsely boast of his name, which cannot be suitable to you; for ye are Canaan.”
He afterwards adds In his hand is the balance of fraud, he loves to plunder, or to spoil. Literally it is, he loves to spoil. But the sense is clear, that they loved to plunder; that is, they were carried away with all greediness to acts of robbery. It must first be noticed, that the Prophet here exposes to infamy the carnal descendants of Abraham by calling them Canaan, and this imputation is often to be met with in the Prophets. And the reason why they were thus addressed was, that these senseless men were wont proudly to set up as their shield the distinction of their race. “What! we are a holy people.” Since by this pretence they rejected all the warnings of the Prophets, God casts back this reproach, “Ye are not the children of Abraham; but ye are Canaan:” as though he said, “Nothing in that nation has as yet changed, the Israelites are always like themselves.” The Lord had once cleansed the land of godless men: but when the descendants of Abraham became like the Canaanites, they were called the seed of Canaan; as though the same nation, which was there formerly, had still remained; for there was no difference in their manners, for they were equal or the same in depravity.
But the reason follows why he calls them the race of Canaan even because they carried in their hand a deceitful balance, and devoted themselves with all avidity to plunder. The deceitful balance may be extended to their dissimulations, fallacies, and falsehoods, by which God, as he had before complained, was surrounded; but as it immediately follows, He loves robberies, I prefer to understand here those two modes of doing injury which include almost every kind of wickedness; for men either craftily defraud when they injure others, or they do harm to their neighbours by open force. Since, then, they who wrong their neighbours do either openly injure them, or circumvent the simple by their frauds and crafty dealings, Hosea lays down here, in the first place, the deceitful balance, and then he adds their greediness in spoiling or plundering. It is then the same as if he had said that they were fraudulent, and that they were also robbers who proceeded with open violence. He means that they were, without law or any restraint, addicted to acts of wrong and injustice, and were so intent on doing mischief, as to do it either by craft or by open force. There is then no wonder that they were called an uncircumcised race. Why? Because they had nothing to do with God, inasmuch as they had thus departed from his law; yea, they abhorred kindness and mercy. It also follows that they were void of all piety, since they were thus unmindful of all equity towards their neighbours. This is the meaning.
TSK -> Hos 12:7
TSK: Hos 12:7 - -- a merchant : or, Canaan, Eze 16:3; Zec 14:21; Joh 2:16
the balances : Lev 19:35, Lev 19:36; Pro 11:1, Pro 16:11; Amo 8:5, Amo 8:6; Mic 6:10,Mic 6:11; ...
a merchant : or, Canaan, Eze 16:3; Zec 14:21; Joh 2:16
the balances : Lev 19:35, Lev 19:36; Pro 11:1, Pro 16:11; Amo 8:5, Amo 8:6; Mic 6:10,Mic 6:11; 1Ti 6:9, 1Ti 6:10
he loveth : Isa 3:5; Eze 22:29; Amo 2:7, Amo 3:9, Amo 4:1, Amo 5:11; Mic 2:1, Mic 3:1-3, Mic 7:2; Mal 3:5; Jam 5:4
oppress : or, deceive, 1Sa 12:3

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Hos 12:7
Barnes: Hos 12:7 - -- He is a merchant - Or, indignantly, "a merchant in whose hands are the balances of deceit!"How could they love "mercy and justice,"whose trade ...
He is a merchant - Or, indignantly, "a merchant in whose hands are the balances of deceit!"How could they love "mercy and justice,"whose trade was "deceit,"who weighed out deceit with their goods? False in their dealings, in their weights and measures, and, by taking advantage of the necessities of others, oppressive also. Deceit is the sin of weakness oppression is the abuse of power. Wealth does not give the power to use naked violence but wealthy covetousness manifoldly grinds the poor. When for instance, wages are paid in necessaries priced exorbitantly, or when artisans are required to buy at a loss at their masters’ shops, what is it but the union of deceit and oppression? The trading world is full of oppression, scarcely veiled by deceit. "He loveth to oppress."Deceit and oppression have, each, a devilish attractiveness to those practiced in them; deceit, as exercising cleverness, cunning, skill in overreaching, outwitting; oppression, as indulging self will, caprice, love of power, insolence, and the like vices. The word "merchant,"as the prophet spoke it, was "Canaan;"merchants being so called, because the Canaanites or Phoenicians were the then great merchant-people, as astrologers were called Chaldeans. The Phoenicians were, in Homer’ s time, infamous for their griping in traffic. They are called "gnawers"and "money-lovers". To call Israel, "Canaan,"was to deny to him any title to the name of Israel, "reversing the blessing of Jacob, so that, as it had been said of Jacob, "thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel,"he would in fact say, ‘ Thy name shall be called no more Israel, but Canaan’ ; as being, through their deeds, heirs, not to the blessings of Israel but to the curse of Canaan."So Ezekiel saith, "Thy father was an Amorite, and thy mother a Hittite"Eze 16:3.
Poole -> Hos 12:7
Poole: Hos 12:7 - -- He is a merchant Ephraim, of whom here, is so far from being Jacob, or as Jacob, that you may call and account him a Canaanite, a subtle merchant.
T...
He is a merchant Ephraim, of whom here, is so far from being Jacob, or as Jacob, that you may call and account him a Canaanite, a subtle merchant.
The balances of deceit are in his hand what he cannot gain by fair trading, he will by downright cheating; he is covetous, and very unjust.
He loveth to oppress where violence, calumnies, and false accusations are needful to compass his covetous and cozening designs, he will not stick at them; this way of gain he loveth, his heart is upon it; though God hate the false balance, and false witness, and the violent man, yet Ephraim loves them all for his gain.
Haydock -> Hos 12:7
Haydock: Hos 12:7 - -- Chanaan. The Phœnicians were so called, and all merchants. Here the title is given reproachfully (Calmet) to all the posterity of Jacob. (Haydock...
Chanaan. The Phœnicians were so called, and all merchants. Here the title is given reproachfully (Calmet) to all the posterity of Jacob. (Haydock) ---
None more ignominious could be used, Daniel xiii. 56. Thus Rome is styled Babylon.
Gill -> Hos 12:7
Gill: Hos 12:7 - -- He is a merchant,.... Here is a change of person from "thou" to "he", from Judah to Ephraim, who is said to be a "merchant"; and if that was all, the...
He is a merchant,.... Here is a change of person from "thou" to "he", from Judah to Ephraim, who is said to be a "merchant"; and if that was all, there is nothing worthy of dispraise in it; but he was a cheating merchant, a fraudulent dealer, as appears by what follows: or he is Canaan, or a Canaanite y; more like a descendant of Canaan, by his manners, than a descendant of Jacob. But the Canaanites dealing much in merchandise, their name became a common name for a merchant, as a Chaldean for an astrologer; and as the children of Israel possessed their land, so they followed the same business and employment of life; which, had they performed honestly, would not have been to their discredit; but they were too much like the Canaanites, of whom Philostratus z says, they were covetous and fraudulent; and this was Ephraim's character. The Targum is,
"be you not as merchants;''
the balances of deceit are in his hand; he used false weights and measures; made the ephah small, and the shekel great, and falsified the balances by deceit; had wicked balances, and deceitful weights, and the scant measure, which is abominable, Amo 8:5; they pretended to weigh everything exactly they bought or sold; but cheated either by sleight or hand, holding the balances as they should not; or had one pair of scales and weights to buy with, and another to sell by, contrary to the law of God, Lev 19:35;
he loveth to oppress; instead of keeping and doing mercy and justice, they oppressed the poor, ground their faces, defrauded them of their due, and by secret and private methods cheated them in their dealings with them, and brought them to poverty and distress; and this they took delight and pleasure in, which showed a want of a principle of honesty in them, and that they were habituated to such a course of life, and were hardened in it, and had no remorse of conscience for it, but rather gloried in it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Hos 12:7 Heb “The merchant – in his hand are scales of deceit – loves to cheat.” The present translation rearranges the Hebrew line div...
Geneva Bible -> Hos 12:7
Geneva Bible: Hos 12:7 [He is] ( g ) a merchant, the balances of deceit [are] in his hand: he loveth to oppress.
( g ) As for Ephraim, he is more like the wicked Canaanites...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Hos 12:1-14
TSK Synopsis: Hos 12:1-14 - --1 A reproof of Ephraim, Judah, and Jacob.3 By former favours he exhorts to repentance.7 Ephraim's sins provoke God.
MHCC -> Hos 12:7-14
MHCC: Hos 12:7-14 - --Ephraim became a merchant: the word also signifies a Canaanite. They carried on trade upon Canaanitish principles, covetously and with fraud and decei...
Matthew Henry -> Hos 12:7-14
Matthew Henry: Hos 12:7-14 - -- Here are intermixed, in these verses, I. Reproofs for sin. When God is coming forth to contend with a people, that he may demonstrate his own righte...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Hos 12:7-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Hos 12:7-8 - --
"Canaan, in his hand is the scale of cheating: he loves to oppress. Hos 12:8. And Ephraim says, Yet I have become rich, have acquired property: al...
Constable: Hos 11:12--Joe 1:1 - --VI. The fifth series of messages on judgment and restoration: historical unfaithfulness 11:12--14:9
A tone of ex...

Constable: Hos 11:12--14:1 - --A. Judgment for unfaithfulness 11:12-13:16
Hosea again established Israel's guilt and predicted her puni...

Constable: Hos 11:12--13:1 - --1. The deceitfulness of Israel 11:12-12:14
Several comparisons of Israel and the patriarch Jacob...
